1 / 19

Finance 431: Property-Liability Insurance Lecture 21: Securitization of Catastrophe Risk

Finance 431: Property-Liability Insurance Lecture 21: Securitization of Catastrophe Risk. Securitization of Catastrophe Risk. Impetus Insurance Markets $400-500 Billion in Capital Financial Markets $50-60 Trillion in Capital in US $150-180 Trillion in Capital in World

dalila
Download Presentation

Finance 431: Property-Liability Insurance Lecture 21: Securitization of Catastrophe Risk

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Finance 431:Property-Liability InsuranceLecture 21: Securitization of Catastrophe Risk

  2. Securitization of Catastrophe Risk Impetus Insurance Markets $400-500 Billion in Capital Financial Markets $50-60 Trillion in Capital in US $150-180 Trillion in Capital in World Catastrophe Potential $60-100 Billion Too Large for Insurance Markets Less than a 1% Impact on Financial Markets Need to Develop Mechanisms to Spread Catastrophe Risk More Widely

  3. Securitization of Catastrophe Risk Three Basic Approaches Exchange Traded Derivatives CBOT Cat Insurance Futures and Options Bermuda Commodities Exchange Cat Options Contingent Capital Line of Credit Contingent Surplus Notes Catastrophe Equity Puts Risk Capital Catastrophe Bonds

  4. Alternative Catastrophe Securitization Contingent Capital Insurer Could Buy Puts on Its Own Stock Moral Hazard Puts Not Traded for Most Insurers Cat-Equity- Puts At least 17 trades to date for $4.7 billion of contingent capital

  5. Cat-E-PutsWritten by AON Prenegotiated Option on a Firm’s Own Securities Triggered by a Catastrophic Event Buyer Pays Premium to Option Writer Option Writer Provides Post-event Equity Normally Written for 3 years

  6. Benefits of Cat-E-Puts Allows the buyer to protect its balance sheet Rating agencies view this approach favorably Cost compares favorably with reinsurance

  7. Alternative Catastrophe Securitization Risk Capital Typical case - pre-funded, fully collateralized Commonly termed Cat bonds Provides cedants with additional capital and multiyear coverage for catastrophes Provides investors with diversification and high yields Investors include: Mutual funds Hedge funds Reinsurers Life insurers Money managers

  8. Issuers and Investors • Sponsorship of transactions includes: • Allianz, AGF, CEA, Gerling, Kemper, Mitsui, USAA , State Farm, Tokio, Winterthur, XL Capital, Yasuda, Zurich • AXA Re, Hannover Re, Munich Re, Scor, St. Paul Re, Swiss Re • Investors include: • Reinsurers, Insurers, Banks, Investment Advisors/Mutual Funds, Hedge/ Proprietary Funds

  9. Risks Covered • Gulf Coast Hurricane • California Earthquake • Europe Wind • Japan Earthquake • Japan Typhoon • Midwest Earthquake • Northeast Hurricane • Monaco Earthquake • Puerto Rico Hurricane • Europe Hail • Hawaii Hurricane

  10. Triggers • Indemnity • Parametric • PCS • Modeled Loss

  11. Examples of Risk Capital USAA raised $477 million in June, 1997 Created Residential Re, Ltd. Covers East Coast Hurricane Risk Swiss Re raised $137 million in July, 1997 Created SR Earthquake Fund, Ltd. Covers California Earthquake Risk

  12. USAA Catastrophe Bonds Residential Re raised $477 million in capital Two tranches A-1 Extendible Principal Protected Bonds Pay LIBOR + 273 basis points $163.8millionbonds plus option on $77 million invested in 10 year zero coupon bond Option protects principal, but not economic value A-2 Principal Variable Bonds Pay LIBOR + 576 basis points $313.2 million bonds

  13. USAA Catastrophe Bonds Residential Re reinsures USAA Single East Coast hurricane causing in excess of $1 billion in insured losses to USAA Reinsurance is 80% of losses between $1 and $1.5 billion Stated maturity of bonds is 1 year If there is a loss, maturity can be extended 6 months Interest is payable during extension If a loss occurs on tranch A-1, maturity is extended to 10 years, but no interest will be paid

  14. Swiss Re Catastrophe Bonds SR Earthquake Fund raised $137 million in 2 year notes Three tranches 1 - $42 million floating rate $20 million fixed rate 60% of principal at risk Ratings: Baa2 Moody’s, BBB- Fitch 2 - $60.3 million fixed rate all of principal is at risk Ratings: Ba1 Moody’s, BB Fitch 3 - $14.7 million Not rated

  15. Swiss Re Catastrophe Bonds Triggers PCS index of industrywide losses Investors in first two tranches lose 1/3 of principal at each level $18.5 billion $21 billion $24 billion Lower triggers apply to the third tranch SR Earthquake Fund provides Swiss Re with $112.2 million reinsurance for a single California earthquake

  16. Pricing of Risk Capital Comparison of interest rate differential between risky capital and risk free rate with the expected losses USAA Initial offer 9 times Current trading 6 times Swiss Re 6 times BB rated debt 2.2 times Emerging markets 1.3-2.7 times Problem: This approach ignores the loss distribution. Catastrophe coverage has greater chance of total loss of principal than other debt.

  17. Additional Points Concerning Risk Capital Offshore subsidiary used to avoid taxation of interest Insurers using this approach should expect litigation after a loss. This is common practice after a default on high yield debt.

  18. Summary Catastrophes can be so large that the insurance industry may be unable to handle them under traditional method Securitization can be an effective way to handle catastrophe and other insurance risks This field is just beginning to develop Expertise needed in both insurance and finance

More Related